Sustainability and end-of-life product management: A case study of electronics collection scenarios
Document Type
Conference Proceeding
Publication Date
9-20-2004
Abstract
The National Electronics Product Stewardship Initiative (NEPSI) was established by the US EPA to examine issues associated with electronics recycling, engage in discussions to build consensus among all stakeholder groups, and recommend a strategy for developing a national electronics recycling program. One of the outcomes of this effort was a set of guidelines describing a base level of service for collection and recycling which would apply across the country. Fundamental to the concept of base level of service is sustainability - the need to balance societal concerns for end-of-life product management with system cost-effectiveness and environmentally-sound operational strategies. The Sustainability Target Method (STM), developed in close collaboration between Lucent Bell Labs and the Multi-lifecycle Engineering Research Center at NJIT, is used to evaluate various alternative collection scenarios. The key and unique feature of the STM is that it links the economic value of a system with its environmental impact by defining the relative indicator Resource Productivity (RP) for impact and the absolute indicator Eco-Efficiency (EE) for sustainability, thereby providing practical sustainability criteria for evaluation.
Identifier
4444329248 (Scopus)
Publication Title
IEEE International Symposium on Electronics and the Environment
First Page
132
Last Page
137
Recommended Citation
Caudill, Reggie J. and Dickinson, David A., "Sustainability and end-of-life product management: A case study of electronics collection scenarios" (2004). Faculty Publications. 20222.
https://digitalcommons.njit.edu/fac_pubs/20222
